A Student's Guide to Laplace Transforms
The Laplace transform is a useful mathematical tool encountered by students of physics, engineering, and applied mathematics, within a wide variety of important applications in mechanics, electronics, thermodynamics and more. However, students often struggle with the rationale behind these transforms, and the physical meaning of the transform results. Using the same approach that has proven highly popular in his other Student's Guides, Professor Fleisch addresses the topics that his students have found most troublesome; providing a detailed and accessible description of Laplace transforms and how they relate to Fourier and Z-transforms. Written in plain language and including numerous, fully worked examples. The book is accompanied by a website containing a rich set of freely available supporting materials, including interactive solutions for every problem in the text, and a series of podcasts in which the author explains the important concepts, equations, and graphs of every section of the book.
- Plain-language explanations and many fully worked examples
- Interactive solutions for all problems available on the book's website
- Author-produced podcasts available on the book's website
Reviews & endorsements
'I would recommend this book very highly for advanced first years, and second and third year undergraduates in the physical sciences or engineering who want to get a better feel for the practical uses of Laplace Transforms.' Sue Colwell, The Mathematical Gazette
Product details
January 2022Adobe eBook Reader
9781009115506
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.